WARNING: This is a long file! >>> Advance Program <<< HYPERTEXT '96 Seventh ACM Conference on Hypertext Washington DC, USA, March 16-20, 1996 ------------------------------------------------------------------------- FULL DETAILS AT URL http://www.acm.org/siglink/ht96/ ------------------------------------------------------------------------- ``Docuverse Takes Form...'' In the `70s Ted Nelson coined the term ``docuverse'' to describe a global network of interlinked and personalizable information. Now, two decades later, the docuverse is taking form. Graphics and computing technology now brings inexpensive hypermedia technology to everyone, and the World Wide Web is linking all those everyones together. Keynotes Randall H. Trigg, Xerox PARC Leigh Star, Department of Sociology, UIUC Technical Papers The latest research results in WWW development and use, Hypermedia documents, systems, models, concepts. Courses We are offering two days of courses prior to the conference. Topics include document design and critique, WWW basics, HMTL 3.0 and style sheets, Java for WWW applications, Notes from the Netscape Webmaster, educational use of hypermedia, legal issues, collaboration environments, HyTime, Hyper-G, and more. System Demos Working research systems will be demonstrated. Posters Short presentations of work in progress Workshops There are 4 pre-conference workshops in which researchers will meet to discuss developments in specific technical areas. Doctoral Consortium Doctoral students in an advanced stage of their studies (beyond proposal stage) are invited to apply for participation in this event. About ten students will be invited to participate. At the Doctoral Consortium meeting, each student gives a research presentation to the other attendees and the review committee. Advice is given on the research and social events are planned for the group. To apply, submit a CV, a letter of recommendation from your advisor and a technical paper to either one of the coordinators. Inquiries from North, Central, and South America: Tomas Isakowitz Department of Information Systems Stern School of Business New York University MEC 9-79 44 West 4th Street New York, NY 10012-1126 Fax: +1 (212) 995-4228 Inquiries from Europe, Asia, Africa, Australia: Franca Garzotto Dipartimento di Elettronica e Informazione Politecnico di Milano Piazza L. da Vinci 32 20133 Milano - Italy Fax: +39-2-23993411 --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Timetable Sat March 16 Courses and Workshops Sun March 17 Courses Mon March 18 Main conference program begins Tue March 19 Main conference program Wed March 20 program ends midday Digital Libraries '96 follows, starting Wed afternoon --------------------------------------------------------------------------- For information Email to ht96-info@cs.unc.edu David Stotts (General Chair) Catherine Marshall (Program Chair) Department of Computer Science Hypermedia Research Lab University of North Carolina Department of Computer Science Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3175 Texas A&M University stotts@cs.unc.edu College Station, TX 77843-3112 phone: (919) 962-1833 marshall@bush.cs.tamu.edu fax: (919) 962-1799 phone: (409) 845-9980 fax: (409) 847-8578 ========================================================================= TECHNICAL PROGRAM (Schedule subject to change) Hypertext '96 will provide a common setting for researchers and practicing professionals to share experiences and to compare notes about hypermedia authoring, publishing, system construction, human-computer interaction, digital libraries, and electronic literature. Attendees come with backgrounds in computing, psychology, literature, sociology, engineering, law, medicine -- many different fields. We invite your participation. Monday, March 18 9:00-10:30 Plenary Session: Opening Keynote Randall H. Trigg, Xerox PARC, Title to be announced 11:00-12:30 Papers Session: Spatial Hypertexts HyperCafe: Narrative and Aesthetic Properties of Hypervideo, Nitin "Nick" Sawhney, David Balcom, and Ian Smith Content-oriented Integration in Hypermedia System, Kyoji Hirata, Yoshinori Hara, Hajime Takano, Shigehito Kawasaki The Structure of Hypertext Activity, Jim Rosenberg Perspective Session Case Study: A Hypermedia System as Change Agent Miriam Grace, Boeing Commercial Airplane Group; Kaj Gronbak, University of Aarhus (Chair); (other participants to be announced) 2:00-3:30 Papers Session: Autonomous Hypertext Systems and Link Discovery Practical Methods for Automating Linking in Structured Hypermedia Systems, Chip Cleary and Ray Bareiss Automatic Hypertext Link Typing, James Allen Automatic Text Decomposition Using Text Segments and Text Themes, Gerard Salton, Amit Singhal, Chris Buckley, and Mandar Mitra Papers Session: Hypertext Rhetoric and Criticism Ut Pictura Hyperpoesis, John Tolva Hypertextual Dynamics in A Life Set for Two, Robert Kendall Hypertext with Consequence: Recovering a Politics of Hypertext, Diane Greco 4:00-5:30 Papers Session: Models of Hypermedia Design and Evaluation Information Reuse in Hypermedia Applications, Franca Garzotto, Luca Mainetti, Paolo Paolini Evaluating Hytime: An Examination and Implementation Experience, John Buford Systematic Hypermedia Application Design with OOHDM, Daniel Schwabe, Gustavo Rossi, Simone D.J. Barbosa Panel Session Visual Metaphor and the Problem of Complexity in the Design of Web Sites: Techniques for Generating, Recognizing and Visualizing Structure; Michael Joyce, Vassar College; Robert Kolker, University of Maryland (Co-chair); Stuart Moulthrop, University of Baltimore; Ben Schneiderman, University of Maryland (Co-chair); John Merritt Unsworth, University of Virginia Tuesday, March 19 9:00-10:30 Plenary Session: Keynote Leigh Star, Department of Sociology, UIUC Title to be announced 11:00-12:30 Papers Session: Open Hypermedia The Flag Taxonomy of Open Hypermedia Systems, Kasper Osterbye and Uffe Kock Wiil The HyperDisco Approach to Open Hypermedia Systems, Uffe Kock Wiil and John J. Leggett Toward a Dexter-based model for open hypermedia: Unifying embedded references and link objects, Kaj Gronbak and Randall H. Trigg Papers Session: Navigation in the World-Wide Web A study of navigational support provided by World Wide Web browsing applications, Steve Jones and Andy Cockburn Browsing the WWW by interacting with a textual virtual environment - A framework for experimenting with navigational metaphors, Andreas Dieberger HyPursuit: A Hierarchical Network Search Engine that Exploits Content-Link Hypertext Clustering, Ron Weiss, Bienvenido Velez, Mark A. Sheldon, Chanathip Nemprempre, Peter Szilagyi, David K. Gifford 2:00-3:30 Papers Session: Systems and Infrastructure Hypermedia Operating Systems: A New Paradigm for Computing Peter J. Nurnberg, John J. Leggett, Erich R. Schneider, John L. Schnase HyperStorM: An Extendable Object-Oriented Hypermedia Engine Authors: Ajit Bapat, Jurgen Wasch, Karl Aberer, Joerg M. Haake Media-based Navigation with Generic Links Steve R. Griffiths, Rob J. Wilkins, Paul H. Lewis, Hugh C. Davis Wendy Hall Panel Session The Process of Discovery: Hypertext and Scholarship: John B. Smith, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; George Landow, Brown University; Elli Mylonas, Brown University (Chair); (other participants to be announced) 4:00-6:00 Paper/Panel Session: Versioning VerSE: Towards Hypertext Versioning Styles, Anja Haake and David Hicks Panel Things Change: Deal with it! Versioning, Cooperative Editing and Hypertext Wojciech Cellary, The Franco-Polish School of New Information and Communication Technologies; David Durand, Boston University (Chair); Anja Haake, GMD-IPSI; David Hicks, GMD-IPSI; Fabio Vitali, University of Bologna; James Whitehead, University of California, Irvine Paper mini-session: Extending the World-Wide Web (4:00-5:00) Logic Programming with the World-Wide Web, Seng Wai Loke and Dr. Andrew Davison Experiences in Developing Collaborative Applications Using the World Wide Web "Shell", Andreas Girgensohn, Alison Lee, and Kevin Schlueter Perspectives mini-session: Evaluation (5:00-6:00) Francisco V. Cipolla Ficarra (Polytechnical University of Barcelona) "The Importance of the Visual Components in the Creation of Educational Hypermedia Packages for a Virtual Campus" Punyashloke Mishra and Kim Nguyen (NCSA, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champagne) "Reading Hypertext Fiction: The effect of Individual Beliefs and Assumptions about Authors, Readers and Texts" Blair Nonnecke, Richard Jacques, Diane McKerlie, Jenny Preece (South Bank University) "Video-Based Hypermedia: Guiding Design with Users' Questions" Gary Marchionini (University of Maryland) Chair and Commentator [Gary Perlman, Commentator] Wednesday, March 20 9:00-10:30 Panel Session Future Spaces: Mark Amerika (Brown University), Cathy Marshall (Texas A&M), Tom Meyer (Brown University, Chair), Mark Pesche (other panelists to be announced) Mini Perspectives: WWW Authoring and Collaboration Howard Besser (University of Michigan), Mauritia Holland (University of Michigan) and Judy Weedman (University of Illinois) "Hypermedia in Support of Distant-Independant Education" Michael Bieber (New Jersey Institute of Technology) "Crafting the Electronic Edition of the _Communications of the ACM_ August 1995 Special Issue on Hypermedia Design" Paul De Bra and Frank Dignum (Eindhoven University of Technology) "Collaborative Hypertext Authoring in the Web" Gary Hill, Les Carr, Dave De Roure and Wendy Hall (University of Southampton) "The Distributed Link Service: Multiple Views on the WWW" John R. Wolcott and Joan E. Robertson (University of Washington): "The WWW as an Environment for Collaborative Research: An Experiment in Graduate Education" Norbert Streitz, GMD-IPSI (Co-Chair) Steven J. DeRose, Electronic Book Technologies (Co-Chair) 11:00-12:30 Plenary Session: Closing Keynote To be announced ========================================================================= COURSES Hypertext '96 will offer several technical courses prior to the main conference. These courses are designed to give attendees in-depth knowledge about specific topic areas and issues related to hypermedia systems, applications, and usage. We have 14 half-day and two full-day courses: 6 meet on Saturday, and 11 meet on Sunday. At a Glance... Course Title Day Time Instructor(s) Course # Educational Uses of Hypermedia Sat AM/PM Landow&Russell #16 Serving Hypermedia to the Web (Hyper-G) Sat AM/PM Andrews #2 Moving from Print to Interactive Media Sat AM Cain #6 HTML 3.0, Style sheets, & VRML Sat PM Raggett #1 Electronic Commerce on the WWW Sat PM Isakowitz #7 Java for the WWW Sun AM Chan #5 Large Scale Info Mgmt (Microcosm) Sun AM Hall&Davis #3 New Interactive Media Publications Sun AM Ritchie #8 Sustainable Hypermedia Publications Sun AM Glushko #9 O-O Hypermedia Sys Design (Dexter) Sun AM Gronbak&Trigg #11 Reading & Evaluation of Hypermedia Apps Sun AM Paolini #12 Design of Collaborative Environments Sun PM Streitz #13 Netscape WWW site & 2.0 extensions Sun PM Bergson #4 The HyTime Standard Sun PM Kimber #14 Hypermedia Engineering Hands-on Sun PM Nanard #15 Intellectual Property Protection Sun PM Samuelson #10 Individual Course Descriptions Theme: WWW & Open Systems 1) Course: Designing Web pages with HTML3, style sheets, and VRML This course will review the features of Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) version 3.0, the proposed standard for style sheets developed by the World Wide Web Consortium. The instructor will also review the Virtual Reality Modeling Language (VRML) being developed for presenting 3D objects on the World-Wide Web. Instructor: Dave Raggett, World Wide Web Consortium Date: Saturday afternoon, half day 2) Course: Serving Hypermedia to the Web with Hyper-G Hyper-G is a second generation information system, which provides advanced facilities for the structuring and maintenance of large amounts of information, and which can be accessed by World-Wide Web, Gopher, and native Hyper-G clients. This course will give participants an understanding of the concepts behind Hyper-G and the in-depth knowledge necessary to set up and run a Hyper-G information server. Instructor: Keith Andrews, Institute for Information Processing and Computer Supported New Media, Graz University of Technology, Austria Date: Saturday, full day 3) Course: Large Scale Hypermedia Information Management The aim of this course is to examine the problems associated with large scale multimedia information delivery and management using hypermedia systems. Link management is crucial to maintaining control of large scale hypermedia projects. The course will consider various methods, including use of structured documents and separate databases of links. The course will examine currently available systems including The World Wide Web and Hyper-G as well as the Microcosm system which was developed by the Multimedia Group at the University of Southampton specifically for managing large scale hypermedia resources. Case studies will be used throughout to illustrate the principles covered by the course. Instructors: Wendy Hall and Hugh Davis, The University of Southampton UK Date: Sunday morning, half day 4) Course: The Netscape WWW site and Netscape 2.0 extensions The Netscape web site is one of the most heavily trafficked sites on the Internet. The instructor, who is editor of this site, will review how the site was created and then focus on strategies for using the many new HTML extensions supported by Netscape Navigator 2.0 on websites today. Instructor: Eliot Bergson, Netscape Corporation Date: Sunday afternoon, half day 5) Course: Java for the WWW The Java programming language promises to add new levels of interactivity to the World-Wide Web. This course will review the design and development of the Java language and discuss examples of how it can be used in a variety of web applications. Instructor: Patrick Chan, formerly with Sun Microsystems Date: Sunday morning, half day Theme: Commerce 6) Course: Moving from Print to Interactive Media This course will explore design principles of interactive media and the computer-human interface. The goal is to give attendees a look at the world of both interactive media and multimedia from the perspective of the design field, and to briefly step through a process for creating interactive media applications. We will cover a simplified process and a short list of questions intended to help translate content in one media form (paper) to interactive media. Instructor: John Cain, E Labs Date: Saturday morning, half day 7) Course: Electronic Commerce on the WWW This tutorial presents an introduction to key aspects of electronic commerce from a technical and business strategy. The purpose of this tutorial is to explain the principles that govern hypermedia on the WWW, elaborate on the Hypermedia/Internet connection, and provide an understanding of key policy and management issues involved in electronic commerce Instructors: Tomas Isakowitz and Ajit Kambil, Stern School of Business, New York University Date: Saturday afternoon, half day 8) Course: New Interactive Media Publications In the competitive struggle over how to build new mass markets for consumer interactive publications, the war may not yet be over, but the battles are all running in one direction, and the winner is usually hypertext, in the shape of the World-Wide Web delivered over the Internet. As a publishing medium WWW is almost perfect: low cost; mass free; instantaneous; global. However, at the moment, nobody is making any real money in consumer publishing. We still don't know how to build the business models, what mixture of subscription, advertising and sponsorship will be sustainable? What impact will the low cost of entry have on 'professional' publishing. These are the issues that will be addressed in this course. Instructor: Ian Ritchie, British Computer Society, UK Date: Sunday morning, half day 9) Course: Sustainable Hypermedia Publications A hypertext publishing effort becomes sustainable when a business and organizational framework is put in place to support it. At that point: an end-to-end publishing process is defined and documented, and people have clear job responsibilities within it; publications can be maintained on a schedule and new ones added by people other than those who worked on the initial effort; technology choices are not fixed, and hardware or software can be upgraded transparently publication quality and the cost to achieve it are measurable and predictable. This course is about ensuring that your hypertext publishing efforts are sustainable, or making a conscious choice when you don't want them to be. Instructor: Robert J. Glushko, Passage Systems Date: Sunday morning, half day 10) Course: Intellectual Property Protection This course will equip hypermedia and digital library developers with the knowledge needed to determine what intellectual property rights they have in hypermedia products or library materials they develop and when they will need to license technology from other developers. The goal of the course is not to give attendees "legal advice" but to provide them with enough familiarity with intellectual property rights issues so that they can more easily recognize when they should seek legal counsel. Instructor: Pamela Samuelson, Cornell Law School Date: Sunday afternoon, half day Theme: Technical 11) Course: Object-oriented hypermedia system design -- a Dexter-based Approach This course will use the Dexter Hypertext Reference Model as a basis for addressing current problems in hypermedia system design. Particular topics will include: components as vehicles for integrating third-party applications, virtual components to support dynamically computed content, structured composites as models of the inner contents of linked objects, extensions to Dexter's notion of link directionality, dangers and benefits of dangling links, and use and maintenance of anchors with and without link markers. The tutorial will also present a Dexter based architecture for hypermedia in collaborative settings. The discussion will draw on examples from applications built in the DEVISE Hypermedia (DHM) framework, developed at Aarhus University, Denmark. Instructors: Kaj Gronbaek, Aarhus University, and Randy Trigg, Xerox PARC Date: Sunday morning, half day 12) Course: Selected Reading & Evaluation of Hypermedia Applications This course will introduce methods and criteria to critically read and systematically analyze, test and evaluate hypermedia applications, coupling a hypermedia design model (HDM) and general usability criteria. We will present and discuss a variety of hypermedia applications, including CD ROMs, research prototypes, and WWW applications, from a wide range of domains including education and training, museums, entertainment, catalogues, encyclopedias and multimedia databases. Attendees should be able to look more rationally and critically at existing applications, detecting inconsistencies and suggesting potential improvements, and discuss more precisely requirements and design choices. Instructor: Paolo Paolini, Politecnico di Milano, Italy Date: Sunday morning, half day 13) Course: Designing Collaboration Environments based on the Common Ground of Hypermedia and CSCW The objective of this course is to help participants 1) to learn about the widely neglected but existing common ground of hypermedia and CSCW, 2) to gain a better understanding of the opportunities of cooperative hypermedia systems by learning about the two roles of hypermedia, i.e. to be the subject matter of and a medium for cooperative work, 3) to evaluate the potential of hypermedia systems for building collaboration-support environments, 4) to develop a personal judgment by being presented with examples of existing systems comparing their underlying design rationale and resulting system features. At the end, participants will be able to understand when and how to consider hypermedia-based information systems for collaboration support in their own work environment or in their product line. Instructor: Norbert A. Streitz, Integrated Publication and Information Systems Institute, German National Research Center for Information Technology Date: Sunday morning, half day 14) Course: An Introduction to the HyTime Standard This course introduces students to the HyTime standard, ISO/IEC 10744, providing a conceptual overview of the standard and how it can be applied in general to the problems of creating, managing, and presenting hypermedia information. The course covers the following topics: using SGML and HyTime to represent hypermedia documents; hyperlinking and addressing in HyTime; Data storage abstractions in SGML and HyTime; defining hypermedia presentations with HyTime (event schedules and finite coordinate spaces); using HyTime with current tools and technology; using HyTime for networked delivery of hypermedia. Instructor: W. Eliot Kimber, Passage Systems Date: Sunday afternoon, half day 15) Course: Hypermedia Engineering Hands-on This course aims at demonstrating in practice the simplicity and the efficiency of the mixing of automatic generation with incremental design on a real scale problem. After an introduction to the design method, attendees will directly participate in a "hands on" session, putting into practice the method and designing an hypermedia document about the HT'96 conference. The method will follow the main stages of refinement loop, from design to automated production and then to the evaluation and maintenance of a real scale hyperdocument. The "hands on" session will focus on design issues such as the iterative improvement of the navigation structure, the look and interaction, taking advantage of the evaluation of the produced hypermedia document. Instructor: Marc Nanard, Laboratoire D'Informatique de Robotique et de Microelectronique de Montpellier, France Date: Sunday afternoon, half day Theme: Education 16) Course: Educational Uses of Hypermedia: From Design to the Classroom Hypermedia, a powerful tool for creating and delivering educational materials, combines many forms of media into a rich representational system creating possibilities for dramatically expanded educational opportunities. In this course we will examine the state-of-the-art in educational hypermedia, exploring not only what's currently available, but also what is will be coming in the near-term future. Examples of currently available hypermedia will be examined, and heuristics for selecting, using, and creating educational hypermedia will be given. The instructor's experiences in using hypermedia in education will highlight the difficulties and opportunities hypermedia presents. Instructors: Dan Russell, Apple Computer, George P. Landow, Brown University Date: Saturday, full day ========================================================================= WORKSHOPS In connection with HT'96, four workshops will be held prior to the main conference. Attendance is by invitation only, following submission of a position paper (see call for participation for individual workshops below). Access to Heterogeneous, Multimedia Databases, Sat. 16th March, 1996 2nd Workshop on Open Hypermedia Systems, Sat. 16th and Sun. 17th March 1996 Hypermedia Research and the World-Wide Web, Sun. 17th March 1996 Incorporating Hypertext Functionality Into Software Systems, Sat. 16th and Sun. 17th March 1996 Workshops provide an opportunity for small groups who share a technical interest to meet for intense discussions. To ensure a small enough group for open interchange, each workshop is limited to 20 participants. These participants are chosen ahead of time on the basis of position papers sent to the workshop organizers. Workshop attendees are expected to participate actively to ensure that this forum advances the state of the art. Participants will be expected to be familiar with all materials sent as preparation for the workshop and to participate actively in the workshop discussions. Attendees may be asked to give a short presentation that will serve as a basis for discussion. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Workshop 1: Access to Heterogeneous, Multimedia Databases The theme of this workshop is query access by naive users to a universe of discourse consisting of multiple, heterogeneous, multimedia databases in such a way that the users need not know the location or format of the information that they request. This is in contrast to the traditional methods of routing by location, address, and type. The goals of the workshop are: 1) to elucidate the state of the art in navigating a universe of data bases whose locations are unknown to the users, 2) to define open research questions in areas related to the above, and 3) to identify approaches to representing meta-knowledge for intelligent navigation in heterogeneous multimedia data bases. Organizers(in alphabetical order): Phillip Ein-Dor, Tel-Aviv University and The Claremont Graduate School Ran Giladi, Ben-Gurion University of The Negev Peretz Shoval, Ben-Gurion University of The Negev Israel Spiegler, Tel-Aviv University. Contact person: Professor Phillip Ein-Dor Chair, Programs in Information Science The Claremont Graduate School 130 E. Ninth St. Claremont, CA 91711-6190 U.S.A. Email: eindorp@cgs.edu OR eindor@vm.tau.ac.il ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Workshop 2: 2nd Workshop on Open Hypermedia Systems The main objective of this workshop is to provide a forum for exchange of information and discussion of topics for people sharing interests in open hypermedia systems. The specific objectives of the workshop are to provide the latest results from ongoing well-known research projects in the area (e.g., DHM, Microcosm, Multicard, Hyperform, SP4, Chimera and WWW), to allow research topics and new approaches to be presented and discussed, and to work towards common standards and reference models for open hypermedia systems. Organizers: Uffe Kock Wiil, Aalborg University Serge Demeyer, Brussels Free University Contact Person: Uffe Kock Wiil Dept. of Computer Science Aalborg University Fredrik Bajers Vej 7E 9220 Aalborg, Denmark FAX: +45 98 15 81 29 Email: kock@iesd.auc.dk ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Workshop 3: Hypermedia Research and the World-Wide Web The objectives of this workshop are to bring together hypermedia researchers and web developers, document hypermedia research's role in current web development, and to lay out the web's role in future hypermedia research. The workshop will be broken down into three segments: 1) Hypermedia research's influence, 2) World-Wide Web needs, and 3) Further research. Organizer and contact person: Keith Instone, instone@cs.bgsu.edu ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Workshop 4: Workshop on Incorporating Hypertext Functionality Into Software Systems This workshop takes a cross-disciplinary approach to implementing hypermedia as value-added support functionality. We consider the entire process of embedding hypertext functions into non-hypertext oriented information systems. These include a large base of scientific and business applications, which dynamically generate their content, and which people use primarily for their underlying analytic functionality Hypertext features both supplement and give users access to the application's primary activities. Organizers: Helen Ashman, V. Balasubramanian, Michael Bieber, Harri Oinas-Kukkonen Contact person: Michael Bieber New Jersey Institute of Technology CIS Department Newark, NJ 07102-1982 telephone: +1 201 596-2681 fax: +1 201 596-5777 email: bieber@cis.njit.edu ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- For further general information, please contact: Kasper Osterbye Aalborg University Department of Mathematics and Computer Science Fredrik Bajers vej 7e 9220 Aalborg O, Denmark phone +45 9815 8522, fax +45 9815 8129 Email: kasper@iesd.auc.dk ========================================================================= ========================================================================= REGISTRATION INFORMATION PRINT THIS FORM, FILL IT OUT, AND MAIL IT WITH PAYMENT TO: Hypertext '96 Registration D. Bloom, Dept. of Computer Science CB 3175, Sitterson Hall University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3175 USA Contact the Hyatt Regency Bethesda directly to make hotel room reservations. Be sure to identify yourself as a Hypertext '96 attendee to get the conference rate. Name: _______________________________________________________ Mailing address: __________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ Phone: ____________________________________ Fax: ____________________________________ Email address: ________________________________________________________ ACM member #: ________________________________________________ Affiliation (for badge): _____________________________________________________________ Special needs: ________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________ Total fee paid (use worktables below): ________________________ Paying by Check (yes/no)? ________________ (please make it payable to ACM Hypertext '96 and include it with this form) Paying by Credit Card: Type (Visa, MC, Amex): _________________ Expiration: _________________ Number: __________________________________________________________ Signature: ________________________________________________________________________ Fee Schedules (If you don't see tables below, you need a different Web browser Conference fees include continental breakfasts, refreshment breaks, social functions, and preoceedings. Course fees include refreshment breaks. FEES FOR CONFERENCE By 2/23/96 After 2/23/96 Your fee: ACM/SIG members $395 $475 $ Nonmembers $460 $565 $ Students $150 $150 $ FEES FOR COURSES 1 course 2 courses 3 courses 4 courses Your fee: ACM/SIG members (advance)$175 $295 $395 $475 $ ACM/SIG members (after 2/23/96) $215 $375 $475 $550 $ Nonmembers (advance) $225 $365 $475 $575 $ Nonmembers (after 2/23/96) $270 $425 $550 $650 $ Students $85 $155 $210 $260 $ Which courses (by number)? # # # #